Just how Dickensian is China?
Inequality is better than it was. But it doesn’t feel that way
![](https://www.economist.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=1424,quality=80,format=auto/sites/default/files/images/print-edition/20211002_FND000_0.jpg)
WITH ITS fast trains, super-apps, digital payments and techno-surveillance, China can seem like a vision of the future. But for some scholars, such as Yuen Yuen Ang of the University of Michigan, it is also reminiscent of the past. Its buccaneering accumulation of wealth and elaborate choreography of corruption recall America’s Gilded Age at the end of the 19th century, an era that takes its name from a novel by Mark Twain and Charles Warner.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Black cat, white cat, fat cat, thin cat”
Finance & economics October 2nd 2021
- How a housing downturn could wreck China’s growth model
- China’s new political risk premium
- The latest shock to China’s economy: power shortages
- Can lending controls solve the problem of unaffordable housing?
- Making sense of the chaos in commodity markets
- Two Fed presidents resign after criticism of their investment activities
- Just how Dickensian is China?
- Award: Henry Curr
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